I’ve wondered about this for years. Then I realised some of you might know the answer…
In the late 80’s the ‘Star Trek Spaceflight Chronology’ was released. It put dates to Trek events and filled in loads of blanks in Star Trek’s future history (I don’t actually have the book, but I’ve seen several online timelines based on it. Apologies if I get anything wrong). It’s emphasis was on the stuff that happened between now and Star Trek TOS.
Its dating scheme was used in several novels including ‘Final Frontier’ as well as stuff full of pretty diagrams like ‘Mr. Scott’s Guide to the Enterprise’ and RPG gaming stuff.
In the 90’s the ‘Star Trek Chronology’ was released. Rather than an updated version of SFC, it used a different dating scheme (SFC set TOS at the start of the 23rd century. STC set each episode exactly 300 years after their original airdate, thus bumping things up by about 60 years). Star Trek Chronology didn’t feature as much ‘made up’ (I hate using terms like that for a TV show! It’s ALL made up!!) stuff as SFC did, but it did arbitrarily pick dates for certain events, such as when the Federation was formed, the Romulan War and how long it lasted, birthdates of the main characters and when they went to space academy.
Intended as a guideline for Star Trek writers, the Chronology has since been taken far too seriously by Trek fans everywhere (does it matter if events are bumped around a bit for the sake of a good story?). Used by every Trek writer since release.
The latest ‘official’ timeline is in ‘Voyages of Imagination’. It’s an updated version of the Star Trek Chronology with the novels slotted in around the episodes, and a million footnotes explaining that nothing quite fits together properly.
Hundreds of online versions and variations of these timelines exist to ensure no one forgets things that never really happened.
My question is: Why was the chronology completely rewritten in the 90’s? Why not just update Spaceflight Chronology and remove anything that has since been contradicted? It seems strange that two licensed chronologies would appear less than a decade apart with such different interpretations of Star Trek’s future history.
In the late 80’s the ‘Star Trek Spaceflight Chronology’ was released. It put dates to Trek events and filled in loads of blanks in Star Trek’s future history (I don’t actually have the book, but I’ve seen several online timelines based on it. Apologies if I get anything wrong). It’s emphasis was on the stuff that happened between now and Star Trek TOS.
Its dating scheme was used in several novels including ‘Final Frontier’ as well as stuff full of pretty diagrams like ‘Mr. Scott’s Guide to the Enterprise’ and RPG gaming stuff.
In the 90’s the ‘Star Trek Chronology’ was released. Rather than an updated version of SFC, it used a different dating scheme (SFC set TOS at the start of the 23rd century. STC set each episode exactly 300 years after their original airdate, thus bumping things up by about 60 years). Star Trek Chronology didn’t feature as much ‘made up’ (I hate using terms like that for a TV show! It’s ALL made up!!) stuff as SFC did, but it did arbitrarily pick dates for certain events, such as when the Federation was formed, the Romulan War and how long it lasted, birthdates of the main characters and when they went to space academy.
Intended as a guideline for Star Trek writers, the Chronology has since been taken far too seriously by Trek fans everywhere (does it matter if events are bumped around a bit for the sake of a good story?). Used by every Trek writer since release.
The latest ‘official’ timeline is in ‘Voyages of Imagination’. It’s an updated version of the Star Trek Chronology with the novels slotted in around the episodes, and a million footnotes explaining that nothing quite fits together properly.
Hundreds of online versions and variations of these timelines exist to ensure no one forgets things that never really happened.
My question is: Why was the chronology completely rewritten in the 90’s? Why not just update Spaceflight Chronology and remove anything that has since been contradicted? It seems strange that two licensed chronologies would appear less than a decade apart with such different interpretations of Star Trek’s future history.